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  • Scholars Call For Reexamination Of ECHR Judgment On Genocide Denial

    SCHOLARS CALL FOR REEXAMINATION OF ECHR JUDGMENT ON GENOCIDE DENIAL CASE

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/02/16/scholars-call-for-reexamination-of-echr-judgment-on-genocide-denial-case/
    By Contributor // February 16, 2014

    Highlight 'Historical and Conceptual Inaccuracies' in Court Decision

    BOSTON, Mass. (A.W.)-Concerned genocide scholars issued an open
    letter highlighting "historical and conceptual inaccuracies" in the
    European Court's decision on Dogu Perincek v. Switzerland, and called
    on the government of Switzerland to request a reexamination of the
    Court's judgment.

    Below is the full text of the letter, released on Feb. 14.

    ***

    An Open Letter to: Madame la Conseillère federale Simonetta Sommaruga
    Cheffe du Departement federal de justice et police (DFJP) Palais
    federal ouest CH-3003 Berne

    After having read the European Court's decision on Dogu Perincek v.

    Switzerland (ECHR. 370, 230, 17 December, 2013) we, as concerned
    genocide scholars, believe it imperative to respond to historical
    and conceptual inaccuracies that are articulated in the decision,
    and we believe those inaccuracies have serious ethical and social
    significance.

    We do not take issue with the notion of freedom of expression,
    something that scholars agree is most often an essential part of open,
    democratic society. We are, however, concerned about elements of the
    Court's reasoning that are at odds with the facts about the historical
    record on the Armenian genocide of 1915 and at odds with an ethical
    understanding of denialism.

    The decision asserts that: 1) "genocide as a precisely defined legal
    concept was not easy to prove"; 2) "the Court doubted that there could
    be a general consensus as to the events such as those at issue, given
    that the historical research was by definition open to discussion
    and a matter of debate, without necessarily giving rise to a final
    conclusion or to the assertion of objective and absolute truths";
    the court uses the phrase "heated debate" in referring to the current
    political context surrounding the Armenian genocide.

    First, it is the overwhelming conclusion of scholars who study genocide
    (hundreds of independent scholars, who have no affiliations with
    governments, and whose work spans many countries and nationalities
    and the course of decades) that the Ottoman mass killings of Armenians
    conforms to all the aspects of Article 2 of the U.N. CPPC definition
    of genocide.

    In 1997, the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS),
    the major body of scholars who study genocide, passed a resolution
    unanimously recognizing the Ottoman massacres of Armenians as
    genocide. The International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ)
    prepared an analysis for the Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission
    (TARC) in 2003, stating that "the Events [of 1915] include all of
    the elements of the crime of genocide as defined in the Convention
    (UNCPPCG).

    In 2000, 100 leading Holocaust scholars signed a petition in The
    New York Times affirming the events of 1915 were genocide and urging
    worldwide recognition. An Open Letter from the IAGS to Turkish Prime
    Minister Erdogan, in June, 2005, enjoined the Turkish government
    to own up to "the unambiguous historical record on the Armenian
    genocide." The only three histories of genocide in the 20th century
    that genocide-studies theorists (such as William Schabas) agree on
    are the cases of the Armenians in Turkey, in 1915; the Jews in Europe,
    in 1940-45; and the Tutsis in Rwanda, in 1994. The destruction of the
    Armenians was central to Raphael Lemkin's creation of the concept
    of genocide as a crime in international law, and it was Lemkin who
    coined and first used the term Armenian Genocide in 1944.

    The idea put forth by the Court that crimes of genocide may only
    apply to the events in Rwanda and at Srebrenica because they were
    tried at the ICC is incomplete. Crimes of genocide have been assessed
    as historical events by scholars for decades now, and both the crimes
    committed against the Armenians by the Ottoman Turks in 1915 and those
    committed against the Jews of Europe by the Nazis in the 1940s were
    deemed genocide by Lemkin. As legal scholars have noted, crimes of
    genocide can be tried retroactively, and William Schabas has pointed
    out that in the Eichmann trial in Jerusalem, in 1961, the word genocide
    was used retroactively to designate crimes committed against the Jews.

    Further, under Article 10, "the Court clearly distinguished the
    present case from those concerning the negation of the crimes of the
    Holocaust. . . . because the acts that they had called into question
    had been found by an international court to be clearly established."

    We would note that the perpetrators of the Holocaust were prosecuted at
    the Nuremberg Trials (1945-46), not for the crime of genocide, but for
    "crimes against humanity," even though Raphael Lemkin had previously
    created the term "genocide." The Armenian case, contrary to the Court's
    assertion, does have a clear legal basis for its authenticity. First,
    "crimes against humanity" was the very phrase coined by France,
    the United Kingdom, and Russia in their 1915 joint declaration in
    response to the massacres of the Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish
    government. After WWI, the Ottoman government convened military
    tribunals (1919-20) to try 200 high-level members of the military and
    government for premeditated mass murder of the Armenian population. The
    ICTJ decision of 2006 also affirms such a legal basis.

    The Court also decided, on the basis of Article 17 (prohibition of
    abuse of rights), that "The rejection of the legal characterization as
    'genocide' of the 1915 events was not such as to incite hatred against
    the Armenian people." Yet the ECtHR states (para 19) that "the negation
    of the Holocaust is today the principal motor of anti-Semitism." We
    would note similarly that the denialism of the Armenian genocide in
    Turkey resulted in the assassination of Armenian Turkish journalist
    Hrant Dink, and has resulted in violence to others in Turkey.

    In referring to the Armenian genocide as "an international lie," Mr.

    Perencik reveals a level of extremism that belies all sense
    of judgment. We believe that the Court makes a misstep when it
    privileges Turkey's denialism (a country with one of the worst records
    on intellectual freedom and human rights over the past decades) as a
    "heated debate." As the IAGS has written in an Open Letter on denialism
    and the Armenian genocide (October, 2006), "scholars who deny the
    facts of genocide in the face of the overwhelming scholarly evidence
    are not engaging in historical debate, but have another agenda. In
    the case of the Armenian Genocide, the agenda is to absolve Turkey
    of responsibility for the planned extermination of the Armenians--an
    agenda consistent with every Turkish ruling party since the time of
    the Genocide in 1915. Scholars who dispute that what happened to the
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915 constitutes genocide blatantly
    ignore the overwhelming historical and scholarly evidence."

    As noted genocide scholar Deborah Lipstadt has written: "Denial of
    genocide whether that of the Turks against the Armenians, or the Nazis
    against the Jews is not an act of historical reinterpretation . . . .

    The deniers aim at convincing innocent third parties that there is
    another side of the story . . . when there is no other side." We
    believe that the Court's decision and reasoning contributes to
    denialism and this has a corrosive impact on efforts for truth and
    reconciliation, and ethics.

    We believe it important that the government of Switzerland request
    a reexamination of the Court's judgment in this case.

    Sincerely,

    Taner Akcam, Kaloosdian/Mugar Professor, Center for Holocaust and
    Genocide Studies, Clark University

    Margaret Lavinia Anderson; Professor of the Graduate School (Current);
    Professor of History emerita; University of California - Berkley

    Joyce Apsel, Master Teacher of Humanities, New York University;
    Past President, International Association of Genocide Scholars

    Yair Auron, head, Department of Sociology, Political Science and
    Communication, The Open University of Israel

    Peter Balakian, Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professor of the
    Humanities, Colgate University

    Annette Becker, Professor of History, University of Paris, Ouest
    Nanterre La Defense; senior member, Institut Universitaire de France

    Matthias Bjornlund, archival historian; Danish Institute for Study
    Abroad (DIS), Copenhagen

    Donald Bloxham, Professor of Modern History, University of Edinburgh

    Hamit Bozarslan, Director, EHESS, Paris

    Cathy Caruth, Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters,
    Cornell University

    Frank Chalk, Professor of History; Director, Montreal Institute for
    Genocide and Human Rights Studies

    Israel Charny, Past President International Association of Genocide
    Scholars; Director, Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide, Jerusalem

    Deborah Dwork, Rose Professor of History; Director of the Strassler
    Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Clark University

    Helen Fein, Independent Scholar; former executive director of Institute
    for the Study of Genocide (New York)

    Marcelo Flores, Professor of Comparative History; director, The
    European Master in Human Rights and Genocide Studies, University
    of Siena

    Donna-Lee Frieze, Prins Senior Fellow, Center For Jewish History,
    New York City; Visiting Fellow, Alfred Deakin Research Institute,
    Deakin University, Melbourne.

    Wolfgang Gust, Independent Scholar, Director armenocide.com.de Hamburg

    Herbert Hirsch, Professor of Political Science, Virginia Commonwealth
    University; co-editor, Genocide Studies International

    Marianne Hirsch, William Peterfield Trent Professor of English and
    Comparative Literature at Professor in the Institute for Research on
    Women, Gender, and Sexuality; Columbia University

    Tessa Hofmann, Prof. h.c. Dr. phil, Frie Universitat Berlin, Institute
    for East European Studies

    Richard Hovanissian, Professor Emeritus, Armenian and Near Eastern
    History at the University of California, Los Angeles; Distinguished
    Visiting Scholar at Chapman University and the University of
    California, Irvine

    Raymond Kevorkian, Historian, University of Paris-VIII-Saint Denis

    Hans-Lukas Kieser, Professor of Modern History, University of Zurich

    Mark Levene, Reader in Comparative History, University of Southampton,
    UK

    Robert Jay Lifton, MD; Distinguished Professor Emeritus, The City
    University of New York

    Deborah Lipstadt, Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish History and
    Holocaust Studies, Emory University

    Wendy Lower, John K. Roth Professor of History, Claremont McKenna
    College

    Robert Melson, Professor Emeritus, Purdue University; Past President,
    International Association of Genocide Scholars

    Donald E. Miller, Professor of Religion; Director, Center for Religion
    and Civic Culture, University of Southern California

    A. Dirk Moses, Professor of Global and Colonial History, European
    University Institute, Florence and Senior Editor, Journal of Genocide
    Research.

    James R. Russell, Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies, Harvard
    University

    Roger W. Smith, Professor Emeritus of Government, College of William
    and Mary; Past President, International Association of Genocide
    Scholars

    Leo Spitzer, K.T. Vernon Professor of History Emeritus, Dartmouth
    College

    Gregory Stanton, Research Professor in Genocide Studies and Prevention,
    George Mason University; Past President, International Association
    of Genocide Scholars

    Yves Ternon, Historian of modern genocide, independent scholar, France

    Henry C. Theriault, Professor of Philosophy, Worcester State
    University; Co-Editor-in-Chief, Genocide Studies and Prevention

    Eric D. Weitz, Dean of Humanities and Arts and Professor of History,
    The City College of New York/Graduate Center

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/02/16/scholars-call-for-reexamination-of-echr-judgment-on-genocide-denial-case/

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